Facello v. Department of Economic & Employment Development

657 A.2d 363, 104 Md. App. 575
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 27, 1995
DocketNos. 848, 849 and 870
StatusPublished

This text of 657 A.2d 363 (Facello v. Department of Economic & Employment Development) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Facello v. Department of Economic & Employment Development, 657 A.2d 363, 104 Md. App. 575 (Md. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

HOLLANDER, Judge.

Appellants Henry J. Cogdell, Charles A. Facello, and Alonzo S. Williams, who are all former employees of appellee Bethlehem Steel Corporation (“Bethlehem”), elected to retire when Bethlehem closed the particular division in which they worked. Upon retirement, they sought to qualify for unemployment benefits. Appellants’ claims were, however, partially denied by the Board of Appeals (the “Board”) of the Department of Economic and Employment Development (“DEED”), appellee. At issue is the significance of a single monetary disbursement, called a “Special Payment,” made by Bethlehem to each appellant soon after retirement but prior to the commencement of monthly pension payments.

Appellants’ unemployment benefits claims were initially considered by various claims examiners and appeals were taken to the Board. After holding a consolidated evidentiary hearing, the Board determined that part of the Special Payment constituted a periodic retirement payment and a portion constituted accrued vacation time. As a result, each appellant was disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits to the extent the Special Payment constituted a periodic retirement payment. In all three cases, appellants appealed the Board’s decisions to the Circuit Court for Baltimore City and Bethlehem cross-appealed.

[578]*578In a well-reasoned opinion, Judge Marvin B. Steinberg affirmed the Board’s decision that the Special Payment was, in part, a periodic retirement payment. The court reversed, however, the Board’s determination of non-disqualification on the basis of payment for accrued vacation time.

Questions Presented

The parties present the following two issues for our consideration:

1. “Did the Circuit Court err in affirming the Board’s decision and concluding that the special lump sum payment that Appellants received following their layoff was not a lump sum payment within the meaning of '§ 8—1008(b)(2) of the Labor and Employment Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland.”

2. “Did the Circuit Court err in reversing the Board’s decision and concluding that the period in which the ‘retirement portion’ of the special payment would be allocated to reduce weekly unemployment benefits was the thirteen weeks provided for in the Pension Agreement.”

For the reasons discussed below, we conclude that the circuit court did not err. Accordingly, we shall affirm.1

Factual Background

The facts are essentially undisputed; the parties presented their evidence below almost entirely by stipulation.

Cogdell, Facello, and Williams were long-time employees at Bethlehem’s rod mill in Sparrows Point, Maryland; they had been employed there for 41, 36, and 37 years of service, [579]*579respectively. On August 15, 1992, Bethlehem permanently closed its rod mill. In anticipation of the closing, Bethlehem presented the displaced employees with various choices: (1) they could be placed on layoff until a permanent job became available; (2) they could bid on lower paying jobs in the labor pool; or (3) if eligible, they could retire and collect their pension benefits. If an employee chose to retire, the retirement benefits would be paid in accordance with the company’s Pension Agreement. Appellants each chose to retire and collect pension benefits, although they also intended to seek other employment elsewhere. Pending re-employment, each appellant sought unemployment benefits pursuant to Md.Code Ann., Lab. & Emp’t Art., Title 8 (1992).2

Under the terms of Bethlehem’s Pension Agreement,3 an eligible employee who retires is entitled to a “Special Payment,” followed by a monthly pension benefit equal to the “regular pension amount.” The Pension Agreement defines “Special Payment,” in pertinent part, as follows:

The Special Payment is the payment for the first three full calendar months following the month in which retirement occurs.... It is a lump sum equal to IS weeks of vacation pay (14 weeks of vacation pay in the case of employees eligible for more than four weeks of regular vacation in the year of retirement), reduced by any regular vacation pay received for the year of retirement.... Under the basic labor agreement a participant entitled to vacation which he has not taken by the time of retirement does not receive that vacation or vacation pay if he is eligible for the Special Payment, but no deduction will be made from the Special Payment for such vacation.

(Emphasis added).

Once calculated, the Special Payment is payable at any time during the first three months following retirement, but $1,000 [580]*580must be made available “as soon as possible” within the first month, and the balance must be made payable “as soon as possible thereafter.” The regular pension amount is equal to a percentage (the magnitude depending on the length of service) of the employee’s monthly salary rate at the time of retirement, and is payable in monthly installments beginning in the fourth month after retirement.

In September 1992, each appellant received his Special Payment. Cogdell received $9,481, which included four weeks of vacation pay;4 Faeello received $7,662, which included three weeks of vacation pay;5 and Williams received $7,595, which included three weeks of vacation pay.6 Also in September 1992, appellants applied for unemployment benefits.

Further facts will be included where pertinent to our discussion of the issues presented.

Discussion

I. Procedural Background

Because of the closing of Bethlehem’s rod mill at Sparrow’s Point, each appellant would have been entitled to a maximum weekly unemployment benefit of $223, absent the receipt of pension benefits. It is undisputed, however, that appellants were not entitled to unemployment benefits if they also received monthly pension benefits that exceeded the amount of the unemployment benefits. § 8-1008(b).

Appellants began to receive monthly pension benefits soon after. December 1, 1992. The parties agree, therefore,-that [581]*581appellants were disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits after that date. What is in dispute is the effect of the single monetary sum paid to each appellant prior to the commencement of the monthly pension benefits. The question is whether the Special Payment disqualified the appellants from unemployment benefits during the thirteen-week period preceding commencement of the regular monthly pension benefits.

The provisions of § 8-1008 are central to this case. It states, in pertinent part, as follows:

(a) “Retirement payment ” defined.—In this section, “retirement payment”:

(1) means an amount in the form of a pension, annuity, or retirement or retired pay from a trust, annuity, profit sharing plan, insurance fund, annuity or insurance contract, or any other similar lump sum or periodic payment that is based on any previous covered employment for a base period employer under a plan paid for wholly or partly by a base period employer; and
(2) does not include a payment from a state or federal workers’ compensation program.

(b) Effect of

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657 A.2d 363, 104 Md. App. 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/facello-v-department-of-economic-employment-development-mdctspecapp-1995.